K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born, Part III

I guess I’ve been on autopilot for the past few days. I’ve had time off because of the holidays, and there’s a family matter to attend to next week, so I haven’t been in a regular state of mind. I’d decided to dedicate this sort of limbo space to watching and writing about Jeongnyeon: The Star is Born, which might’ve felt indulgent but not wildly divergent from other experiences with K-dramas here. I basically binge-watched both Anna and Genie, Make a Wish, though not in such a concentrated period of time. To clarify, I generally don’t watch TV shows like that; I don’t even watch movies in one sitting. And although it didn’t match my exact expectations, Jeongnyeon turned out to be great in a more traditional way, as covered in the first report, before darkening, as noted in the second. Still, even at that point, I imagined I’d watch the rest of the show and type up this very blog post, easy peasy like always. Sitting here in the immediate aftermath of the finale, I can tell you that I don’t want to write this prophesied third report. I feel really, really weird. Bad, I suppose, but in an unfamiliar way. It might seem silly to be so affected by a work of entertainment, and I can’t address that without an entirely separate conversation about the social utility of art and what have you, so in the meantime, you’ll just have to excuse me. I think Jeongnyeon: The Star is Born is a really great K-drama. Easily one of the best I’ve seen. I also – at least at this moment – don’t believe I’ve been more harmed by a TV show. I’ve been disturbed, harrowed, and moved countless times, but this is different. … More K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born, Part III

K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born, Part II – A Perfect Episode

I was perfectly satisfied with the prospect of doing Jeongnyeon in two reports, so consider this an emergency situation. And I just hope to God there aren’t further incidents from here to the finale. In two episodes, Jeongnyeon: The Star is Born gave me a lot to process and absolutely no slack to do so. It’s hard to think… when you’re crying. Episode eight, specifically, is one of those “perfect episodes” I used to get so hung up on, but before we get there, I did leave myself on something of a cliffhanger. Previously, Jeongnyeon upstaged the performance of Jamyunggo, winning over the audience to the point where even the audience was like, “Wait, this isn’t how it’s supposed to go!” I was bracing myself for the scene where Ok-gyeong returns to the stage and the crowd starts chanting for Soldier #1, but thankfully, we don’t see that. And as we may find, it likely didn’t happen. Still, I assumed that Ok-gyeong’s patience with Jeongnyeon would finally run out, and there’d be hell to pay. I just want that so badly. Jung Eun-chae is so compelling as Moon Ok-gyeong as Prince Hodong, but as Moon Ok-gyeong off the stage, it’s harder for me to assess the performance because she’s so similar to Jung Eun-chae herself. In Anna, the menace of Hyun-ju reverberated through her entire body; it was a transformation. Ok-gyeong rarely even gets upset with anyone – rarely. For now, I understand that Ok-gyeong isn’t offended by Jeongnyeon’s antics because she sees her almost as an experiment. The disillusioned star is simply playing a different game than everybody else. … More K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born, Part II – A Perfect Episode

K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born (2024)

Kim Tae-ri is probably the best actor to come out of Korea since Choi Min-sik, and while such hyperbolic language may indicate a simple mind structured, Sith-like, by absolutes, I’m comfortable with the assessment because she’s so quintessentially Korean. Seamlessly toggling between physical comedy and genuine heartbreak, it’s like she was crafted by the gods to inhabit the whiplash tones and extreme scenarios of popular Korean film and television. Specifically, the way she can make me cry and laugh simultaneously is exactly how critics describe Bong Joon-ho’s The Host, and of course, her acting debut was in Park Chan-wook’s celebrated film The Handmaiden. She’d go on to win industry awards with roles in major titles like Mr. Sunshine and Twenty-Five Twenty-One, and managed to close out the first ten years of her career with another canonical entry: Jeongnyeon: The Star is Born – confound that double colon – which netted her the Grand Prize at the APAN Star Awards and Best Actress at the Baeksang Awards (her second), as well as the label “Television Actor of the Year” by Gallup Korea. Where Kim Tae-ri goes, quality is sure to follow, if her taste for sci-fi blockbusters is the only thing suspect about such a jeweled filmography. And so, taking up the titular role in Jeongnyeon, she’s flanked by a murderers row of veterans like Ra Mi-ran and Moon So-ri as well as young, fierce talent like Shin Ye-eun – and of course, the scene-stealing ladykiller, Jung Eun-chae. … More K-Drama Report: Jeongnyeon: The Star Is Born (2024)